Dying for Victorian Medicine - Elizabeth T. Hurren

Dying for Victorian Medicine

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Autor: Elizabeth T. Hurren

Wydawnictwo: Palgrave Macmillan
ISBN: 9781137405890
EAN:
Format: ...
Oprawa: miękka
Stron: 400
Data wydania: 2014-04-01
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The 19th century business of anatomy was lucrative. In a Victorian underworld commercial body dealers bought dead paupers from asylums, infirmaries and workhouses. They sold the nameless and friendless on to teaching hospitals and medical students for dissection. Corpses travelled in dead boxes on railway trains to get fresh cadavers quickly to trainee doctors; others were bought in the street where they died. For the first time, all the suppliers paid in petty cash along this human supply chain are rediscovered, and their financial profiteering in bodies and body parts. Heart-rendering human stories lost in the archives are brought back to life. We encounter servants, prostitutes, and the labouring poor, down on their financial luck, who supplied the dissection table. Dying for Victorian Medicine celebrates the contribution of thousands of forgotten human faces who lived and died in abject poverty, and in so doing, created a better medical future for everyone today. "The first book to provide a detailed analysis of the body-trafficking networks of the dead poor that underpinned the expansion of medical education from Victorian times. With an even-handed approach to the business of anatomy, Hurren uses remarkable case histories which still echo a vibrant body-business on the internet today in a biomedical age." - goodreads.com "Dying for Victorian Medicine is a valuable contribution to the social-humanist and economic history of death and dissection. Informed by, and in many ways a sequel to, Ruth Richardson's Death, Dissection, and the Destitute (2000), Her study is as tantalizing for its sensitive restoration of the poor souls who ended up on dissectors' slabs (a staggering 125,000 in all, she estimates [p. 303]) as for the detective work involved in order to arrive at its facts and figures... Dying for Victorian Medicine marks the most detailed scholarly dissection to date of one particular set of traffics in dead bodies, as well as perhaps the most eloquent literary effort to capture the lives of the dissected (from the vantage of the slab looking up, not upon)." - Professor Roger Cooter, American Historical Review "This book demonstrates that Ruth Richardson's Death, Dissection and the Destitute is not the last word on the Anatomy Act (1832).The trade in bodies clearly thrived throughout the Victorian period and into the 20th century. Hurren explores the practical workings of the system and the dispersed historical fragments into what at times seems like a detective story, with undertakers and traders reappearing in a vast network of opportunist body suppliers'." Dr Jonathan Reinharz, Social History of Medicine "Hurren takes up where Richardson left off to explore the demography, geography, culture, finance and socioeconomic dimensions of dissection. She successfully combines elements of the storyteller with penetrating historical insights to chart the growing complexities of the trade in cadavers after 1832. The result is a groundbreaking and exciting study of the dissected as 'matter out of place' that never loses sight of the poor or of the fear and impact of dissection...this is one of the best books in the social history of medicine that I have read in the last five years (and perhaps longer)." - Keir Waddington, Cardiff University, UK "Hurren weaves together stories of paupers across England with hard data on the fluctuating numbers of medical students, workhouse inmates, and bodies supplied to anatomy departments; poor law union incomes and pauper burial costs; as well as distances that the bodies travelled along newly built railway tracks - The most illuminating part of Hurren's book is her skillful mapping of the fluctuations in body supply...this is a wonderful contribution to the study of poverty and medicine." - Dr Tatjana Buklijas, Bulletin of the History of Medicine "Hurren's writing style makes for an easy and fascinating read...

Książka "Dying for Victorian Medicine"
Elizabeth T. Hurren